TELECOM Digest     Wed, 23 Feb 94 09:03:00 CST    Volume 14 : Issue 98

Inside This Issue:                          Editor: Patrick A. Townson

    It's Impossible, Isn't It? (Bob Schwartz)
    Oh No, Not This Confused Again ... (Telemate) (Paul Robinson)
    Caller ID Box With RS232 (Daniel Wynalda)
    PCS Documents? (goodmans@delphi.com)
    Help: Pair-Gain Information Needed (wood@odie.ee.wits.ac.za)
    Vermont Gets Ready For NNX Area Codes (John Levine)
    Murata M3 EPROM Reset Sequence Wanted (lchesali@iki3.bitnet)
    Telecommunications in Southeast Asia (Sean Noble)
    Re: Shortage of Prefixes in 800? (Clive D.W. Feather)
    Re: Shortage of Prefixes in 800? (Al Varney)
    Connecting a PBX/Telephone to a PC (Robert La Ferla)
    Chips/Boards For ADSL or HDSL etc. (D.E. Price)
    Call for Participation: Feature Interaction Workshop '94 (H. Velthuijsen)

TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not
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----------------------------------------------------------------------

Subject: It's Impossible, Isn't It?
From: bob@bci.nbn.com (Bob Schwartz)
Date: Tue, 22 Feb 94 15:49:33 PST
Organization: Bill Correctors, Inc., Marin County, California


This happened to me and I've never heard of such a thing.

I have several lines and while talking on line line, which is hooked
up to a fax machine and a phone (distinctly seperate stations), the
phone integrated into the fax machine began to ring. then, right on
que, the fax machine answered and my conversation was obliterated by
fax tones The line has no special features such call waiting or three
way calling.  It does however recieve from a remote call forwarding
source, but I can't see how RCF would have any involvement.

Has anyone seen or heard of such an occurance and how could it be?


Bob Schwartz                                       bob@bci.nbn.com
Bill Correctors, Inc.   +1 415 488 9000   Marin County, California

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 22 Feb 1994 23:41:35 EST
From: Paul Robinson <PAUL@TDR.COM>
Reply-To: Paul Robinson <PAUL@TDR.COM>
Subject: Oh No, Not This Confused Again (Telemate)
Organization: Tansin A. Darcos & Company, Silver Spring, MD USA


In Pennsylvania, there is a company called "Snyder's of Berlin, PA,
Inc" that makes potato chips.  There is also a "Snyder's of Hanover,
Inc", (PA) that makes potato chips.  What do *both* of them use as the
name for their potato chips?  "Snyder's".  Both of them, on their
package, quite carefully, in small print, disclaim any relation with
the other.

Now, what does this have to do with telecom?  Here's the situation.
Winfred Ho, who lives in Ontario, Canada, is the author of a
multitasking terminal program that runs on DOS based (not Windows)
machines and provides the capabilities that would be associated with
OS/2, including automated downloading, script capability, and the
ability to run downloads or scripts in background while viewing and/or
editing a text file.  I consider the program to be about as important
to me in doing telecommunications as my right arm, and when I don't
have it I notice it right away; it so fit me perfectly that I didn't
even wait 30 days from the first time I used it to register it.  I am
*extremely* fussy about telecom programs; I used the original Bitcom
software for over five years because of more than a dozen comm
programs I tried, every one was missing something I desparately
needed, which, while I didn't like Bitcom, did what I needed.  Then I
found this program and it did everything I could want.

The name of this program is "Telemate" and has been sold BOTH in the
U.S.  and Canada for more than five years.

Recently someone else referenced here -- in response to a question about
it -- what appeared to be a *totally different* program for a totally
different purpose, that *also* uses the name Telemate.

In the event the original poster wanted the name and address of the
company that sells Winifred Ho's Telemate, here's the cut from the
registration text file for version 4.12.  In addition to being on many
BBSs, this program can be found via an ARCHIE search, in four Zip
archive files as TM412-1.ZIP through TM412-4.ZIP.

               White River Software
               P.O.Box 73031
               Limeridge Mall Postal Outlet
               Hamilton, Ont. L9A 5H7
               Canada

    ====== Telemate 4.12 ======================= Credit Card Order ======

    For MasterCard or Visa card order, please call the Public (Software)
    Library at 1-800-2424-775 or 1-713-524-6394 (order only please) and
    ask for TELEMATE or by writing to

            Public (Software) Library
            P.O. Box 35705
            Houston, TX 77235-5705
            USA


Paul Robinson - Paul@TDR.COM

------------------------------

Subject: Caller ID Box With RS232
Date: Tue, 22 Feb 1994 14:33:54 EST
From: Daniel Wynalda <danielw@wyn386.mi.org>


I'm sorry -- I'm sure this is a FAQ as I've seen it before.  I have
just received notice we have caller ID available in this area and
would like to add it.  However, I would like my computer to be able to
receive the information.  Is there such a thing as a CID box with
RS232 output?  The goal would be to use my voice card (Soundblaster)
to announce the call.

Better yet, is there a voice card with caller ID that could go in a PC
and I could program software to interface with it?  Any help is appreciated.


Daniel Wynalda       | (616) 866-1561 X22 Ham:N8KUD Net:danielw@wyn386.mi.org
Wynalda Litho Inc.   | 8221 Graphic Industrial Pk. | Rockford, MI  49341 

------------------------------

Date: Wed, 23 Feb 1994 09:06:39 EST
From: GOODMANS@delphi.com
Subject: PCS Documents?


Are there any 'white papers' out there which gives an overview on PCS
(Personal Communications Services)?  I have seen alot of articles on
the service over the last few months, but I would like to have one
definitive document which gives an overview and possibly a listing of
some of the companies which are driving this.


Thanks!

GOODMANS@DELPHI.COM

------------------------------

From: wood@odie.ee.wits.ac.za
Subject: Help: Pair-Gain Information Needed
Date: Wed, 23 Feb 1994 05:32:46 GMT
Organization: Wits Electrical Engineering (Novell Users).


Hi,

I am looking for infomation on pair-gain which is a technique of
multiplexing (usually two) subscriber calls onto a single copper pair.
The reason I need this information is that I wish to investigate if it
could be used to improve the party line systems that we have in
operation here in rural areas.

Any e-mail information, suggestions or references that you could
supply would be greatly appreciated, as I am battleing to find good
reference material on the subject.


Thanks.

------------------------------

From: chico!johnl@iecc.com
Date: Tue, 22 Feb 94 18:15 EST
Subject: Vermont Gets Ready For NNX Area Codes
Organization: I.E.C.C., Cambridge, Mass.


A flyer in my latest phone bill reveals that Vermont's new toll
dialing plan is 1-802-NNX-XXXX, the same as will be implemented in
Massachusetts.  Permissive dialing starts on February 18 and ends May
18.

Calling card calls must be dialed 0-802-NNX-XXXX, same dates.

The flyer explains, fairly clearly, that they have to do this because
NXX area codes are coming in 1995.

Oddly, I still haven't seen any announcement of dates for the new
dialing plan in Massachusetts.  The new phone books that arrived this
month (at every house except ours, for the 13th consecutive year) make
no mention of it.

NYNEX was originally planning seven digit dialing for all in-state
calls.  I don't know whether the state PUC required that they change,
or that they did it voluntarily to be consistent with the rest of the
region.  In New Hampshire apparently you'll be able to dial either
way, with a per-line option to block seven digit dialing of toll
calls.

Personally, I find the new plan to be a big pain in the neck, since,
due to a peculiarity of exchange boundaries, it'll require that I dial
most free local calls within our town with 11 digits.


Regards,

John Levine, johnl@iecc.com, jlevine@delphi.com, 1037498@mcimail.com

------------------------------

From: LCHESALI@iki3.bitnet
Subject: Murata M3 EPROM Reset Sequence Wanted
Organization: IKI RAN
Date: Wed, 23 Feb 1994 10:38:57 GMT


Hi friends,

Please help me find EPROM text for MURATA M3 Fax unit. The contents of
its EPROM was destroyed due failure in power supply (+9 volts instead
of 5) which I have fixed. Now the unit can not init itself and I can
suppose the defective EPROM is at fault. I also have no manual and to
find it and even the reset sequence would be great. Electric drawings
and some descriptions seems to be not available but of corse wanted
also.  Hope on your help, many thanks in advance. Better reply by
E-mail, I'll summarizse the answers.  


Sincerely,

Lev

------------------------------

From: Sean_Noble@sgate.com (Sean Noble)
Subject: Telecommunications in Southeast Asia
Date: 22 Feb 1994 17:29:20 GMT
Organization: Collins International Services Company


I am performing research on the telecommunications in Southeast Asia.
Particularly, I am interested in cellular and mobile telecommunications. 
 From what information I have gathered, the major players are NipponTT 
and AT&T.  I have heard some reports of mobile telephones in Viet Nam.
I believe they are not full GSM or AMPS cellular systems, but the CT2
phone system, with dial out only (no call receiving).

Does anyone have any other information or experiences?  Any info at
all is appreciated.  Countries in interest include Viet Nam, Laos,
Cambodia, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, and Indonesia.


Thanks!

Sean Patrick Noble   (703) 803-9556  sean_noble@sgate.com

------------------------------

Subject: Re: Shortage of Prefixes in 800?
Date: Tue, 22 Feb 1994 18:12:47 GMT
From: Clive D.W. Feather <clive@sco.COM>


Quoth Carl Moore:

> Someone else wondered if 800-NXX-XXXX could generalize to
> 800-XXX-XXXX (ditto for area 900), since there is no occasion to use
> less than the ten-digit number (including the area code) to reach any
> of them.

In the UK, special rate numbers (free, cheap, and premium) all use any
first digit, including 0 (usually long distance access), 1 (usually
telecom services access) and 9 (often a short code prefix). For
example, British Rail's express parcel service used to be 0800 000
000.


Clive D.W. Feather      Santa Cruz Operation 
clive@sco.com           Croxley Centre       
Phone: +44 923 816 344  Hatters Lane, Watford
Fax:   +44 923 817 688  WD1 8YN, United Kingdom

------------------------------

Date: Mon, 21 Feb 94 14:24:17 CST
From: varney@ihlpe.att.com
Subject: Re: Shortage of Prefixes in 800?
Organization: AT&T


In article <telecom14.94.5@eecs.nwu.edu> Carl Moore <cmoore@BRL.MIL>
writes:

> In the messages about N00 prefixes, lincmad@netcom.com commented
> about seeing N0X/N1X prefixes in use for area 800 (tollfree calls).
> Yes, I have been seeing some of those, too.  Someone else wondered if
> 800-NXX-XXXX could generalize to 800-XXX-XXXX (ditto for area 900),
> since there is no occasion to use less than the ten-digit number
> (including the area code) to reach any of them.  A response said that
> a lot of local switches would block 800-0xx and 800-1xx (ditto for
> area 900),

   I don't believe any "local switches" are not capable of handling
1xx and 0xx office codes in a ten-digit number.  These were/are
routinely used to route early versions of INWATS and private network
traffic.  What many local switches are not capable of is supporting
0XX/1XX office codes in seven-digit translators -- a leading 0+ or 1+
is pulled off prior to looking at the translator.  Supporting ten-digit
calls of the NXX-0/1XX-XXXX form requires building a different form of
digit translator to handle the office code (typically the NXX would
just "point" to a seven-digit translator).

> ... and it occurs to me: back in the 1970s, when 213 was the
> only area code having N0X/N1X prefixes, did a lot of local switches
> block 213-N0X and 213-N1X because they were "smart" enough to spot
> that 0 or 1 in the middle digit of what should be the prefix?

   I was not aware any "local switches" blocked such inter-NPA calls.
Obviously, until the NPA 213 switches were populated with information
for routing seven-digit N0X/N1X numbers, they would fail to route
them.  You sure it wasn't PBXs blocking calls?


Al Varney

------------------------------

From: Robert La Ferla <Robert_La_Ferla@hot.com>
Subject: Connecting a PBX/Telephone to a PC
Reply-To: Robert La Ferla <Robert_La_Ferla@hot.com>
Date: Wed, 23 Feb 1994 08:30:00 CST


Where can I get more information about connecting a PBX or telephone
to a PC?  What hardware interfaces are currently in use?  What
manufacturers?  Who do you recommend?

If you're willing to chat with me about this, drop me an e-mail with
your telephone number.


Robert La Ferla     Hot Technologies

------------------------------

From: dap@aber.ac.uk (D E Price)
Subject: Chips/Boards for ADSL or HDSL etc.
Organization: University of Wales - Aberystwyth - Prifysgol Cymru
Date: Tue, 22 Feb 1994 20:03:11 GMT


Dear All,

 I am attempting to locate information on availability and
pricing for any chips/ evaluation boards/ products that support HDSL
or ADSL ...


Thanks,

Dave Price

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 22 Feb 1994 15:05:05 GMT
From: H.Velthuijsen@research.ptt.nl (Velthuijsen H.)
Subject: Call for Participation: Feature Interaction Workshop '94
Organization: PTT Research, The Netherlands

    
   Second International Workshop on Feature Interactions
    in Telecommunications Software Systems
    
   Amsterdam, The Netherlands
         May 8-10, 1994


    PRELIMINARY PROGRAM
     and
   CALL FOR PARTICIPATION
    
          DESCRIPTION
        
    The feature interaction problem has been a major obstacle to the rapid
    deployment of new telephone  services.  Telecommunications software is
    huge, real-time,  and  distributed;  adding new features  to  a  tele-
    communication  system, like  adding  new functionalities to any  large
    software system, can be very difficult.  Each new feature may interact
    with  many  existing  features,  causing customer  annoyance or  total
    system breakdown.  Traditionally, interactions were  detected  and re-
    solved  on a feature by feature basis by experts who are knowledgeable
    on all existing features.  As the number of features grows  to satisfy
    diverse needs of customers, managing feature interactions in  a single
    administrative domain is approaching incomprehensible  complexity.  In
    a future marketplace  where features  deployed  in the network may  be
    developed  by different operating companies  and their associated ven-
    dors, the traditional approach is no longer feasible.  How  to detect,
    resolve, or even prevent the occurrence of feature interactions  in an
    open network becomes an important research issue.
    
    The feature  interaction problem is not unique  to  telecommunications
    software; similar problems are encountered in any  long-lived software
    system that  requires frequent  changes  and  additions  to  its func-
    tionality.  Techniques in  many related areas  appear to be applicable
    to the management of feature interactions.  Software methodologies for
    extensibility and  compatibility, for  example,  could  be useful  for
    providing  a structured  design that can  prevent many feature  inter-
    actions from occurring.  Formal specification, verification, and  tes-
    ting  techniques,  being  widely  used  in  protocol  engineering  and
    software  engineering, contribute a  lot  to  the  detection of inter-
    actions.  Several causes of the problem, such as aliasing, timing, and
    the distribution  of software  components, are similar  to  issues  in
    distributed  systems.   Cooperative   problem  solving,  a   promising
    approach for resolving interactions at run time, resembles distributed
    planning and  resolution of conflicting subgoals among multiple agents
    in the area of distributed artificial intelligence. This workshop aims
    to  provide  an  opportunity  for  participants  to  share  ideas  and
    experiences  in their  respective fields, and to apply their expertise
    to the feature interaction problem.


    PRELIMINARY PROGRAM

    ----------------------  Sunday, May 8  -------------------------------

    17:00--19:00    Reception 

    ----------------------  Monday, May 9  -------------------------------

     8:45-- 9:00    Welcome and Opening Remarks 
    
     9:00--10:00    Tutorial --- Results of Pre-Weekend Workshops 
     
    10:00--10:30    Coffee Break 

    10:30--12:00    Technical Presentations 

 "Towards automated detection of feature interactions", 
 K.H. Braithwaite and J.M. Atlee (University of Waterloo) 
 
 "Classification, detection and resolution of service
 interactions in telecommunication services", T. Ohta and Y.
 Harada (ATR Communication Systems Research Laboratories) 
  
 "Service interactions among Pan-European services", K. Kimbler
 (Telia Research/Lund Institute of Technology), E. Kuisch 
 (PTT Research), and J. Muller (CNET) 

    12:00--13.30    Lunch 

    13:30--15.30    Technical Presentations 
  
 "A building block approach to detecting and resolving
 interactions", F.J. Lin and Y.-J. Lin (Bellcore)
 
 "Formalisation of a user view of network and services for
 feature interaction detection", P. Combes and S. Pickin (CNET)

 "Specifying features and analysing their interactions in a
 LOTOS environment", M. Faci and L. Logrippo (University of
 Ottawa) 
 
 "Towards a formal model for incremental service specification
 and interaction management support", K.E. Cheng (Royal
 Melbourne Institute of Technology) 

    15:30--16:00    Coffee Break 

    16:00--18:30    Poster Session --- Poster presentations and demos 


    ----------------------  Tuesday, May 10  -----------------------------

     9:00--10:00    Invited Speaker --- Rob van der Linden, ANSA/APM Ltd 

 On the cross-fertilisation between distributed computing
 systems and telecommunications systems

    10:00--10:30    Coffee Break 

    10:30--12:00    Technical Presentations 
  
 "Use case-driven analysis of feature interactions", K. Kimbler
 and D. Sobirk (Lund Institute of Technology) 
 
 "Interaction detection --- a logical approach", A. Gammelgaard
 and J.E. Kristensen (Tele Danmark Research) 
 
 "Using temporal logic for modular specification of telephone
 services", B. Jonsson and L. Kempe (Uppsala University)

    12:00--13:30    Lunch 

    13:30--15:30    Technical Presentations 
  
 "The negotiating agents approach to runtime feature
 interaction resolution", N.D. Griffeth (Bellcore) and 
 H. Velthuijsen (PTT Research) 
 
 "Detecting feature interactions in the Intelligent Network",
 S. Tsang and E.H. Magill (University of Strathclyde) 
 
 "Restructuring the problem of feature interaction: has the
 approach been validated? An advanced telecommunications
 application for personal mobility", M. Cross and F. O'Brien
 (University of Wollongong) 
 
 "An architecture for defining features and exploring
 interactions", D.D. Dankel, M. Schmalz, W. Walker, K. Nielsen,
 L. Muzzi, and D. Rhodes (University of Florida)

    15:30--16:00    Coffee Break 

    16:00--17:30    Panel Discussion

    17:00    Closing 


         ATTENDANCE
    
    Since workshop attendance has to be limited  to 90 people,  attendance
    will be by  invitation only.   Prospective attendees who  have not yet
    done so are asked to submit a  single page description of their inter-
    ests and how they relate to  the workshop to the workshop chairmen.  A
    registration  package will be  sent to  those who are  invited to  the
    workshop.  There will be a  (limited)  opportunity to present  ongoing
    work and to  demonstrate tools during the poster session.  Persons who
    are interested in making  use of this  opportunity should  contact the
    workshop chairmen.

    The conference  proceedings will be published by IOS Press, Amsterdam.
    IOS Press will also distribute the  proceedings  world wide  after the
    workshop.

     REGISTRATION FEES

    Early registration (before April 2, 1994)
  ACM/IEEE Members USD 190
  non-members  USD 215 
    Late registration (after April 2, 1994)
  ACM/IEEE Members USD 215
  non-members  USD 240

    Registration includes admittance to the workshop,  coffee breaks,  the 
    reception on Sunday,  and the lunches on Monday and Tuesday as well as
    a copy of the proceedings.

    
       ACCOMMODATION

    The workshop will be held in the ParkHotel in the centre of Amsterdam, 
    at walking distance of several museums (Rijksmuseum,  Van Gogh Museum, 
    and  City Museum of Modern Art),  the Concertgebouw Concert Hall,  the 
    Vondel Park,  and  many restaurants and bars.  A block reservation has 
    been made at the same hotel for attendees to the workshop. Room prices
    will be HFL 234 for a single room including breakfast.

    
    WORKSHOP CO-CHAIRPERSONS
    
    Wiet Bouma and Hugo Velthuijsen (PTT Research)

    PO Box 421                 or      St. Paulusstraat 4
    2260 AK Leidschendam               2264 XZ Leidschendam
    The Netherlands                    The Netherlands

    E-mail: L.G.Bouma@research.ptt.nl  H.Velthuijsen@research.ptt.nl
    TEL:    +31 70 332 5457            +31 70 332 6258
    FAX:    +31 70 332 6477 
    

       PROGRAM COMMITTEE
    
    Chair: E. Jane Cameron (Bellcore, USA)
    
    Jan Bergstra           (CWI and University of Amsterdam, 
                            The Netherlands) 
    Ralph Blumenthal       (Bellcore, USA)
    Kong Eng Cheng         (Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, 
                            Australia)
    Bernie Cohen           (City University of London, UK)
    Fulvio Faraci          (CSELT, Italy)
    Robert France          (Florida Atlantic University, USA)
    Steve German           (GTE, USA)
    David Gill             (MITRE, USA)
    Toru Ishida            (Kyoto University, Japan)
    Richard Kemmerer       (UCSB, USA)
    Eric Kuisch            (PTT Research, The Netherlands)
    Victor Lesser          (University of Massachusetts, USA)
    Yow-Jian Lin           (Bellcore, USA)
    Luigi Logrippo         (University of Ottawa, Canada)
    Robert Milner          (BNR, UK)
    Leo Motus              (Tallinn Technical University, Estonia)
    Jacques Muller         (CNET, France)
    Jan-Olof Nordenstam    (ELLEMTEL, Sweden)
    Stott Parker           (UCLA, USA)
    Ben Potter            (BNR, UK)
    Henrikas Pranevitchius (Kaunas University of Technology, 
                            Lithuania)
    Lynne Presley          (Bellcore, USA)
    Jean-Bernard Stefani   (CNET, France)
    Greg Utas              (BNR, Canada)
    Juri Vain      (Institute of Cybernetics, Estonia)
    Yasushi Wakahara       (KDD R&D Laboratories, Japan)
    Ron Wojcik             (BellSouth, USA)
    Pamela Zave            (AT&T Bell Laboratories, USA)


Hugo Velthuijsen.
PTT Research                            Phone: +31 70 332 6258
P.O. Box 421                            Fax:   +31 70 332 6477
2260 AK Leidschendam, The Netherlands   Email: H.Velthuijsen@research.ptt.nl

------------------------------

End of TELECOM Digest V14 #98
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